Abstract

Human neutrophils normally have a very short half-life and die by apoptosis. Cytokines such as granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) can delay this apoptosis via increases in the cellular levels of Mcl-1, an anti-apoptotic protein of the Bcl-2 family with a rapid turnover rate. Here we have shown that inhibition of the proteasome (a) decreases the rate of Mcl-1 turnover within neutrophils and (b) significantly delays apoptosis. This led us to determine whether GM-CSF could enhance neutrophil survival by altering the rate of Mcl-1 turnover. Addition of GM-CSF to neutrophils enhanced Mcl-1 stability and delayed apoptosis by signaling pathways requiring PI3K/Akt and p44/42 Erk/Mek, because inhibitors of these pathways completely abrogated the GM-CSF-mediated effect on both Mcl-1 stability and apoptosis delay. Conversely, induction of Mcl-1 hyperphosphorylation by the phosphatase inhibitor, okadaic acid, significantly accelerated both Mcl-1 turnover and apoptosis. Neither the calpain inhibitor, carbobenzoxy-valinyl-phenylalaninal, nor the pan caspase inhibitor, benzyloxycarbonyl-VAD-fluoromethylketone, had any effect on Mcl-1 stability under these conditions. These observations indicate that profound changes in the rate of neutrophil apoptosis following cytokine signaling occur via dynamic changes in the rate of Mcl-1 turnover via the proteasome.

Highlights

  • Human neutrophils have a very short half-life in the circulation because they constitutively undergo apoptosis [1,2,3,4,5]

  • We have previously shown that neutrophil apoptosis is critically dependent on cellular levels of Mcl-1 [10], an anti-apoptotic protein of the Bcl-2 family first identified as an early induction gene expressed during differentiation of ML-1 myeloid cells [11]

  • We tested whether inhibition of proteasome function had any effect on the cellular levels of Mcl-1 and apoptosis in human neutrophils

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Summary

Introduction

Human neutrophils have a very short half-life in the circulation (estimated to be between 12 and 18 h) because they constitutively undergo apoptosis [1,2,3,4,5]. Cytokines such as granulocytemacrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) can delay this apoptosis via increases in the cellular levels of Mcl-1, an anti-apoptotic protein of the Bcl-2 family with a rapid turnover rate.

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